It's often uncanny how monsters, aliens, and animals in films and video games have strikingly human facial features and expressions.
In the past, the job of ... Read More »
Your Twitter posts and cell phone data such as the location and time of each tweet could help urban planners redesign your city's downtown or transit system und... Read More »
By Lori Cameron
While eyeglasses have improved the lives of millions of people, many wearers are painfully aware of how weird eyeglasses can make their eyes ... Read More »
By Lori Cameron
With profits topping $91 billion worldwide last year, the gaming industry is about to turn an unprecedented corner in immersive, realistic vi... Read More »
By Michael Martinez
More than ever, the nation's 83,000 working journalists are being pressed to explain complicated information in easy-to-understand graphs a... Read More »
Thirty years ago, the first minimally invasive surgery was performed—the laparoscopic removal of a gallbladder. Since then, robotics have taken minimally invasi... Read More »
Let’s face it.
Everybody loves comic books—kids, anime fans, superhero lovers, and hobbyists alike.
Now, scientists in the May/June 2017 issue of IEEE Compu... Read More »
As wearables gain acceptance, we need to know what user interfaces will look like in a post-smartphone world and whether they will support sophisticated mobile ... Read More »
When professors use software programs to teach introductory classes, it’s frustrating when students have to spend more time learning the program than learning t... Read More »
The winning entry of the 2015 IEEE Scientific Visualization Contest, this article describes a visualization tool for cosmological data resulting from dark-matte... Read More »